Math, asked by nikhilpahuja, 11 months ago

Please explain absolute error with example ?​


nikhilpahuja: but some authors write measured value-actual vale

Answers

Answered by Anonymous
2
In words, the absolute error is the magnitude of the difference between the exact value and the approximation. The relative error is the absolute errordivided by the magnitude of the exact value. The percent error is the relativeerror expressed in terms of per 100.

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Answered by samaiyautsav
1

Answer:

Absolute Error. (sometimes with the absolute value taken) is called the absolute error. The absolute error of the sum or difference of a number of quantities is less than or equal to the sum of their absolute errors.

Examples. As an example, if the exact value is 50 and the approximation is 49.9, then the absolute error is 0.1 and the relative error is 0.1/50 = 0.002 = 0.2%. Another example would be if, in measuring a 6 mL beaker, the value read was 5 mL.

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